How Nerves Work 4 Flashcards

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1
Q

What does a diagram of an action potential look like?

A
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2
Q

What is the threshold to fire an action potential?

A

-55mV

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3
Q

Explain the ionic basis of the firing of an action potential?

A
  1. Leaky K+ channels bring the cell to threshold (graded potential)
  2. Voltage gated channels open allowing Na+ to flow in and bring the cell to +40mV
  3. More K+ channels open and bring the cell down to -90mV
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4
Q

What channel is faster, and which is slower, out of Na+ and K+?

A

Na+ channels open faster and K+ stay open for longer

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5
Q

Explain how the excitability of a cell changes?

A

The greater the membrane potential, the greater the excitability of a cell

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6
Q

What does excitability of a cell mean?

A

How easy it is to fire an action potential

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7
Q

What is the absolute refractory period?

A

When all gates are opened and the action potential fires (low excitability)

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8
Q

What is the relative refractory period?

A

Gates are closing and recovering (excitability increasing)

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9
Q

Is the size of an action potential proportional to the size of the stimulis?

A

No, they are all the same size

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10
Q

How does the size of a stimulis impact an action potential?

A

The bigger the stimulis, the more action potentials are fired (increased frequency) but the size is the same (same amplitude)

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11
Q

Are action potentials self-propogating or decremental?

A

Self propogating

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12
Q

What does self propogating mean?

A

Keep making new ones for themselves

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13
Q

How does the self propogation of action potentials work?

A

Depolarisation spreads across a membrane decrementally, opening more channels

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14
Q

Why do action potentials technically not spread backwards?

A

They do, but the gates are not opened so nothing happens and it decremenates into nothing

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15
Q

How can you increase conduction velocity?

A

Larger axons

Myelination

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16
Q

Why do larger axons increase conduction velocity?

A

They decrease conduction resistance

17
Q

What two cells form myelin sheath?

A

Schann cells (PNS)

Oligodendrocytes (CNS)

18
Q

Where are the voltage gates on a myelinated axon?

A

Not in the myelinated section, but in the gaps between (nodes)

19
Q

How does depolarisation spread along a myelinated axon?

A

Spreads from node to node without decaying much to to the high insulation

20
Q

What are some diseases that de-myelination causes?

A

Multiple scerosis

Gwillain-Barre syndrome

21
Q

Why does de-myelination cause disease?

A

Signal decays quicker and doesn’t reach threshold at the next node

22
Q

What is a nerve?

A

A bundle of axons

23
Q

What varies within the axons of a nerve?

A

The size and extent of myelination

24
Q

What is the compound action potential?

A

Signal recorded extracellularly from large populations of axons

25
Q

What does each bump in the graph of a compound action potential represent?

A

An action potential going past at that point in time, each one being from the same stimuli

26
Q

What are the different waves and speeds in a compount action potential?

A
27
Q

Which end of the spectrum of waves is most sensitive to anoxia and local anaesthetic?

A

Aa is most sensitive to anoxia

C is most sensitive to local anaesthetic

28
Q

What is anoxia?

A

An absence of oxygen